H A P T E R XXVI THE TRIUMPHAL CHARIOT THE results of instruction reached in the Children's Houses repre- sent the limit of the education which separates such schools from the elementary classes which follow them. It is well to fix this boundary line, though it is in part artificial. The Children's House is not a preparation for the elementary classes but forms a begin- ning of education which goes on uninterruptedly. With our method we can no longer distinguish the * pre-scholastic' from the * scholastic' period. Indeed we have not in this case a programme governing the instruction of the child, but a case in which the child himself, whilst living and developing himself with the help of physical and intellectual work, indicates stages of culture corresponding, generally speaking, to successive ages. The need for observing, reflecting, learning and also the need for concentration, for isolating himself, and for suspending his activities in silence from time to time has been demonstrated so clearly in the child that we can confidently declare to be wrong the idea that the small child, when outside a place intended to educate him, rests. It is rather our duty to direct childish activity, spare the baby from those useless efforts which dissipate his energy, thwart his instinctive search after knowledge, and so often give